Morning Worship : The Rev. Karoline M. Lewis says a sip of water can lead to life truth

The Samaritan woman was minding her own business, fetching water from the community well as was necessary twice a day.

“What is wrong with this picture?” said the Rev. Karoline M. Lewis at the 9:15 a.m. Tuesday, June 26 morning worship service in the Amphitheater.

She continued her series on Jesus’ encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well. Her sermon title was “When the Well is Deep,” and her text was John 4:7-15.

No one goes to the well at noon, in the heat of the day. People go early in the cool of the morning when the dew is still on the grass or at dusk when the sun has dropped behind the horizon and the heat is waning.

“The Samaritan woman has to go alone, at noon,” Lewis said. “Who wants to be around her? Five husbands? ‘Girlfriend, you have had some bad luck and we don’t want to be around you.’”

The Samaritan woman felt abandoned and shunned. Her empty buckets, Lewis said, would soon be heavy with the weight of the water and the burden of life that left her alone, so very alone.

“Yet, nothing will prevent God from loving the world,” Lewis said. “Nothing will prevent God from finding the witnesses that God needs.”

Jesus finds the woman at the well, and Lewis said he was not at his “Miss Manners best.”

“A sip of water might lead to Jesus telling you your truth,” she said.

Before the woman can admit that Jesus is telling her the truth about herself, she asks Jesus how a Jew could ask her, a Samaritan woman, for a drink.

“She knows her place; no one ever lets her forget it,” Lewis said.

But when God needs us, God finds us. Abraham told God he was too old to have children, and Sarah laughed in God’s face. Moses told God he had not yet taken a public speaking course so he could not talk to Pharaoh. Jeremiah told God he was too young to be a prophet.

At other times, we misunderstand what God is saying to us, and we are in good company. When Jesus told Nicodemus he had to be born again, Nicodemus wondered how he could go back into his mother’s womb.

“When Jesus offered the woman living water, she said, ‘Sir, I see you don’t have a bucket. Have you looked down? The well is deep, really deep,’” Lewis said. “The well is often deep and the water that quenches thirst is so very often out of reach.”

When we peer down the well, Lewis said, we long for a bucket to reach the bottom, and we wonder if it is worth it to try.

Wells do dry up, and we have to find a new water source and dig a new well.

“There is no feeling like being tapped out,” Lewis said, “but Jesus is the water that will never dry out. The living water will gush like a fountain, a geyser.”

The Samaritan woman said, “OK, I‘ll take that water. No more schlepping this bucket.” Lewis said that her response may seem naive, another misunderstanding.

“Jesus is not something that you ‘get,’” Lewis said. “Jesus is someone who takes longer to understand and know.”

Lewis said it was no accident that this story is a conversation — a long one.

“If Jesus had just showed up and said ‘Hey, I’m God,’ the story would not be the same,” she said. “The Samaritan woman wonders, maybe Jesus has something else she needs. Jesus has water but also the relationship for which she longs and which she has been denied for so long.”

This was a pivotal moment in the story.

“The Samaritan woman teaches us one key idea — to produce a living faith, just ask,” Lewis said. “It is hard to be vulnerable, it is hard to ask, to put ourselves on the line, to admit that we can’t do it alone, that we don’t want to be alone.”

Yet, being vulnerable is what relationships are all about and a relationship is what God wants so desperately with us.

“When the well is deep and you are so tired, when the well is deep and you have your wooden bucket, a simple response is all that is necessary,” Lewis said. “‘Jesus, Jesus, give me that water.’”

The Rev. Tara Lamont Eastman, pastor of Tree of Life Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jamestown, presided. Caroline Benton, Chautauqua’s beloved carillonier at the Miller Bell Tower, read the Scripture. The Motet Choir sang “The Eyes of All Wait Upon Thee” by Jean Berger, under the direction of Jared Jacobsen, organist and coordinator of worship and sacred music. The Jackson-Carnahan Memorial Chaplaincy provides support for this week’s services.

Mary Lee Talbot writes the morning worship column. This past winter she made her acting debut as Miss Maudy in To Kill A Mockingbird at the Lucille Ball Little Theater in Jamestown. She edited the forthcoming history of the Jewish presence at Chautauqua and wrote the history of the Chapel of the Good Shepherd for its 125th anniversary this summer. She is a member of the Chautauqua Lake Central School Board and lives year-round in Chautauqua with her dog, Max.